Duffy’s Cut: A Story for the Ages Gerry OShea
I attended
the annual commemoration of the untimely deaths in 1832 of 57 Irish laborers
who worked and died at a stretch of railway track in Chester County,
Pennsylvania known as Duffy’s Cut. The service took place at Laurel Hill
Cemetery located in the East Falls neighborhood of Philadelphia where a
monument is erected in their memory.
The ceremony
was conducted by Dr. William Watson, a History professor in nearby Immaculata
University, and his twin brother, Frank, a Lutheran pastor in Whiting, New
Jersey. They were the driving force behind the research into the tragic
happenings at Duffy’s Cut nearly two hundred years ago. After the vivacious
Vincent Gallagher sang the anthems, the professor spoke, the priest prayed and
they were both part of the piping tribute.
Dr.William
and a lady from the Donegal Society, author Marita Krivda, talked about the
tragedy of the bodies of the young immigrants
dumped in an improvised burial pit near the shanty where they lived.
They extended their reflections to recognize the similar wailing cry emanating
from the women and babies in the cratered Maternity Hospital in the Ukrainian
city of Mariupol. Harrowing sadness and inhumanity joined, past and present.
On June 23rd
1832, the ship John Stamp docked at the port of Philadelphia, and
a local Irish-born contractor, Philip Duffy, hired 57 of the passengers as
laborers to complete a very cranky section of railroad, known as Track Mile 59
on the Pennsylania-Columbia line.
They faced
strong, nativist, anti-immigrant sentiments – still, unfortunately, prevalent
in America today - which in those days identified Irish Catholic newcomers as a
main source of the country’s problems. The bosses in the burgeoning coal and
railroad companies used the penurious Irish as cheap labor while many local
people viewed them as the source of the frightening cholera fever which was
devastating their community.
Philip Duffy
took on many contracts with the local authorities, completing infrastructural
work on roads and railroads, done at low cost. Duffy expected his laborers to
live in their own shantytown and not mix with neighbors, who mostly viewed them
as wild rowdies.
The workers
came from three Ulster counties, Donegal, Derry and Tyrone. Later
archaeological excavation in Duffy’s Cut showed the earliest artifact in
America - a pipe with the clear inscription Erin go Bragh - revealing an
awareness among the young immigrants of a sense of Irish nationhood. No doubt
they were influenced by the United Irishmen rebellion in 1798, which started in
Belfast and surrounding counties, asserting in arms the Irish right to a country,
separate from England.
The
widespread dislike of Catholics, especially those from Ireland, was due in part
to the feeling that Rome had designs on taking over America and imposing its
religion on the new country. This paranoia reached its apex in the 1850s with
the growth of the ruthless and mean-spirited Know-Nothing Party.
The Irish immigrants in the 1830s felt the
sting of prejudice. They were stereotyped as ignorant bogtrotters with strong
allegiance to a foreign religion and so unsuited to the nascent American
democracy. When the cholera epidemic spread to Philadephia, predictably, the
locals blamed the recently-arrived foreigners for the awful scourge.
Within six
weeks of their arrival in late June 1832, all 57 workers were dead, allegedly
from the fever that was raging in the community. Christy Moore and, more
recently, the distinguished Tyrone singer and songwriter, Mickey Coleman,
memorialized the Irish workers in an angry song about all the suffering and
prejudice they endured.
From
Ballyshannon and The Glenties
They sailed
right into hell
They suffered
like the weeping Christ
Down Duffy’s
Cut they sweat their blood
Into his
wishing well.
There is no
record of Philip Duffy playing any positive part in trying to relieve the
crisis the workers faced, and the song doesn’t spare him. The moving dirge includes
lines about a noble blacksmith and Sisters of Charity who came from
Philadelphia to provide succor for the poor misfortunes.
The
Blacksmith and the Holy Sisters
Good people
through and through
Whispered prayers
into the victims’ ears
It’s all
that they could do
How come the
bosses had silence on their lips
As 57 Irish
Navvies were buried in a pit
Many
historians and medical experts doubt that all 57 workers in one place could
have died from the fever. Research shows that there were 176 cases of cholera
recorded in Philadelphia on the worst day of the 1832 infection, causing 71
deaths. Talking about 57 cases without even one survivor makes no sense.
The powerful
railroad owners and developers did not want the full story told. It would have
encumbered their plans as public sympathy would inevitably fixate on young
workers perishing while their employers turned a blind eye to the devastation.
The plot thickens. Frank Watson, the current impresive
pastor and piper, was bequeathed a trove of records by his grandfather, Joseph
Tripician, who held an executive position in the railway company. He managed to
hold on to the Duffy’s Cut file when the New York Central took over the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company in 1968.
The
information in these papers confirmed the suspicion that there were foul deeds
committed at Duffy’s Cut. Fear and blind prejudice against the new immigrants
led to dastardly acts which account for the plenitude of dead bodies.
In 2004, the
Watson brothers brought together volunteer archaeologists to lead Immaculata
students and members of the local Irish community in a major archaeological dig
which, after a few years, yielded skulls, teeth and a wide variety of bones.
Some of these skeletal remains provided definite proof of violent trauma caused
by blunt force.
According to
Dr. Watson, there is clear evidence that local vigilante groups, driven by
intense hatred of the new Irish immigrants combined with a fear of the dreaded
disease, were involved in the murders.
Five men and
one woman whose remains were exhumed from the mass burial site were interred at
the Laurel Hill cemetery in 2012 and they are remembered every year at a March
commemoration. The skeletal remains of two others were buried in their home
counties: Catherine Burns in Clonoe near Coalisland in County Tyrone and the
18-year-old John Ruddy in Ardara in County Donegal.
The
shantytown area still has an eerie feeling with sightings of ghosts continuing
to the present day. Professor Watson told me a few years ago that he wouldn’t
wander around there in the dark. He also said that the message heard from the
dead here can be simply stated: they were real people with families who want
respect for their persons and their life stories. They should not be dismissed
as worthless nonentities thrown in a decaying pit.
Duffy’s Cut is
a story for the ages: young people at the bottom of the pecking order in their
own country launching out with hope to find a new place offering opportunity
and respect. It didn’t work out for the men and women who sailed from Ulster in
1832 who only lasted a few weeks in the promised new world.
Gerry
OShea blogs at wemustbetalking.com
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